Share

Trending Discussions

Have Calm Waters Returned for Shipping Stocks?

Traders are stunned by the performance of the shipping stocks this month, which have been far and away a top market performer. The big questions they are now asking are "Is it real?" and "Is it sustainable?"

This sector has been down for so long that most investors left it for dead a long time ago. All that was missing was the tolling of the Lutine Bell at the insurance exchange, Lloyds of London.

Lured by the heroin of artificially cheap financing during the naughts, the industry massively expanded capacity, believing that international trade would continue to grow at double digit rates forever. It didn't.

Sound familiar? Think of it as "subprime at sea."

Then the 2008 financial crisis hit, and demand evaporated. International trade, the main driver of freight rates, collapsed. Freight rates dropped as much as 90%, and share prices even more. Readers delighted in sending me maps of laid up ships with forlorn crews in Singapore harbor, which at the worst, numbered in the hundreds. You could almost walk to neighboring Malaysia and not get your ankles wet.

For most industries, the economy bottomed shortly thereafter and began a long, slow recovery. Not so for shipping. China, the world's largest buyer of bulk commodities, saw its economy peak in 2010, with annualized GDP growth halving since then from 13.5% to 7.5%.

This unleashed a second, even more vicious crisis for the shipping industry. With massive capital requirements, order times for new ships lasting three years, and hefty cancellation fees common, recovery delays are not what you want to hear about. Ships ordered at the peak of the financing bubble suddenly started showing up in large numbers. So, the industry remains with excess capacity of 20%, especially in the dry bulk, container, and crude oil tanker segments.

This was happening in the face of steadily rising fuel prices, thanks to events in Iran, Egypt, Libya, and Syria. The China slowdown also caused scrap metal rates to plummet, so downsizing shippers were paid less for junking their older, smaller, less fuel efficient ships. American energy independence, thanks to the "fracking" boom, means fewer ships are needed to carry oil from a tempestuous Middle East.

It has been the perfect storm of perfect storms. All but seven of the 30 largest shipping companies bled money in 2012, lots of it. Cumulative industry losses amounted to a mind numbing $7 billion over the past four years. Companies continued to haemorrhage cash, and shareholders suffered.

And then a funny thing happened in August. The Chinese economic data slowly started to improve. Any price tied to business activity in the Middle Kingdom started marching upward in unison, including those for iron ore (BHP), (RIO), coal (KOL), the Australian dollar (FXA), and Chinese and Australian stocks (FXI), (EWA).

This improvement, no matter how uncertain it may be, was not lost on the shipping industry. Capesize charter rates surged from $5,000 to $16,500, while Panamax rates are expected to fly from $8,000 to $9,500 by January. Shipping stocks, the most highly leveraged of asset classes, skyrocketed. This enabled the Baltic Dry Index ($BDI), a measure of the cost of chartering bulk carriers for coal, iron ore, wheat, and other dry commodities, to rise some 160% since July. Apparently, it is off to the races once again.

I am not normally a person who buys a stock after it has just doubled, unless Costco is running a special on Jack Daniels. But if a share has fallen 99%, a double takes it to down only 98%, leaving it still absurdly cheap. Shipping stocks fell so far, they were well below long dated option value. That means the market thought all of these guys were going under, which was never going to happen.

This is certainly the case with Dry Ships (DRYS), your poster boy for the Greek shipping industry. Adjusted for splits, the shares cratered from $120 to $1.50. It has just clawed its way up to $4.00, and then backed off to $3.67. The company's fleet consists of 38 dry bulk carriers, 10 tankers, and has orders for another four ships.

It has completed a major refinancing that takes the firm out of the fire and puts it back into the frying pan. This should buy (DRYS) some time, while other competitors, like Genco Shipping and Trading (GNK) are expected to go under, removing unwanted overcapacity from the market. It also wisely diversified into offshore oil drilling right at the bottom of the market, picking up a 59% stake in Ocean Rig (ORIG) and its two semisubmersible rigs.

(DRYS) is not your typical "widows and orphans" type investment. The web is chocked full of allegations of insider trading, nepotism and self-dealing by senior management. It is domiciled in the Marshall Islands, so don't expect much transparency. Pass the smell test, it does not. After all, it is a Greek company.

If (DRYS) scares you and it should, there are safer ways to play the rebound. The Guggenheim Shipping ETF (SEA) offers a broad mix of industry exposure with lower volatility. It is up only 25% since April.

Even in the best-case scenario, shipping will never return to the heady growth rates of the naughts. China is highly unlikely to ever return to the breakneck growth rates of yore. The law of large numbers is kicking in with a vengeance.

It is modernizing its economic strategy, from a low value added commodity export led one, to a more domestically driven, services oriented approach. The bad news for shippers: The new model uses fewer bulk commodities, and therefore the ships to carry them.

However, if the China recovery is real, even a modest one, then the shipping industry offers one of the best multiple baggers that I can think of.

Related posts

Leave a comment

Name

Email

Captcha

Comment

We will save the information entered above in our website. Your comment will then await moderation from one of our team. If approved, your data will then be publically viewable on this article. Please confirm you understand and are happy with this and our privacy policy by ticking this box. You can withdraw your consent, or ask us to give you a copy of the information we have stored, at any time by contacting us.